Sangoma and reality TV star Gogo Maweni recently revealed on her Instagram story that she will turn her husband Sabelo Mgube into umkhovu (tokoloshe) should he die first.
The popular sangoma Gogo Maweni, real name Lee Ann Makopo also revealed that she and her husband Sabelo Mgube have a contract that states he will be turned into a tokoloshe if he dies first and that she will be turned into a umkhovhu (tokoloshe) if she dies first.
She added on her Instagram story with her friend that they work hard for their money as husband and wife and she wouldn’t want their children to suffer should either of them die.
“We cannot let our children suffer because one of us died. We have to return to the living.”
When the friend laughs at her after her confession “the kids will have a tokoloshe dad” Maweni replies “I don’t hide anything from my kids”.
The popular reality TV star’s husband Sabelo Mgube also revealed on his Instagram story that he knows he’s been bewitched.
“One thing for sure, mina ngidlisiwe, I can feel it”, wrote Mguni on his Instagram story.
Maweni also made headlines this year when she revealed on Podcast and Chill with MacG that she bewitched her baby daddy SK Khoza, who played Shaka Khoza in The Queen. She also said she used ‘muthi’ on her ex-boyfriend and former Orlando Pirates player Thabo Rakhale after he broke up with her.
Iharare revealed that after Gogo Maweni used traditional medicine on Thabo, the footballer struggled to make the Pirates’ starting XI as he was constantly confined to the bench.
The publication added that the dribbling wizard struggled for regular game time and that the club dropped him in 2017 and he joined later Chippa United on a permanent deal.
The controversial sangoma also said she knows Orlando Pirates fans will hate her after her confessions.
She also confessed to casting a spell on former Mamelodi Sundowns soccer player Siyabonga Zulu, whom she has a baby boy with.
“I have ancestors and they hear me when I cry. I’ve also had enough,” she said.
“I didn’t do anything that anybody wouldn’t do. When I say ‘wouldn’t do’ when something is above you you tell your ancestors and God, and what they do with it it’s their problem, not mine.”